posted on 2017-03-15, 00:00authored byNatalie M. Hull, Eric P. Holinger, Kimberly A. Ross, Charles E. Robertson, J. Kirk Harris, Mark J. Stevens, Norman R. Pace
The two municipal drinking water
systems of New Orleans, LA, U.S.A.
were sampled to compare the microbiology of independent systems that
treat the same surface water from the Mississippi River. To better
understand temporal trends and sources of microbiology delivered to
taps, these treatment plants and distribution systems were subjected
to source-to-tap sampling over four years. Both plants employ traditional
treatment by chloramination, applied during or after settling, followed
by filtration before distribution in a warm, low water age system.
Longitudinal samples indicated microbiology to have stability both
spatially and temporally, and between treatment plants and distribution
systems. Disinfection had the greatest impact on microbial composition,
which was further refined by filtration and influenced by distribution
and premise plumbing. Actinobacteria spp. exhibited
trends with treatment. In particular, Mycobacterium spp., very low in finished waters, occurred idiosyncratically at
high levels in some tap waters, indicating distribution and/or premise
plumbing as main contributors of mycobacteria. Legionella spp., another genus containing potential opportunistic pathogens,
also occurred ubiquitously. Source water microbiology was most divergent
from tap water, and each step of treatment brought samples more closely
similar to tap waters.